• Home
  • Book Reviews
  • Books
    • Monthly Wrap Up
    • Giveaways
    • Book Hauls
    • Events
  • Discussions
  • New Releases
  • Features
    • Top Ten Tuesday
    • Romance Thursdays
    • Movie Reviews
    • TV Series Reviews
    • Waiting on Wednesday
  • #LoveOzYA
    • OZYA Interviews
    • OZYA Reviews
  • About
  • Contact
Angel ReadsAngel Reads
  • Home
  • Book Reviews
  • Books
    • Monthly Wrap Up
    • Giveaways
    • Book Hauls
    • Events
  • Discussions
  • New Releases
  • Features
    • Top Ten Tuesday
    • Romance Thursdays
    • Movie Reviews
    • TV Series Reviews
    • Waiting on Wednesday
  • #LoveOzYA
    • OZYA Interviews
    • OZYA Reviews
  • About
  • Contact

Stigma and Reading Genre | Discussion

Stigma and Reading Genre | Discussion

June 27, 2020 Posted by angelreads Discussions 1 Comment

There has always been a stigma regarding reading and writing certain genres. It’s something that I noticed even before I started blogging over eight years ago now. But as the years have gone on and I have started to read more widely, it’s something that I have noticed even more.  

Two of the main genre/readerships that have a lot of stigma around them is romance and young adult. I do want to make a quick note and say that young adult literature is not a genre, it’s a readership. But in the sense of this discussion, I’m grouping romance and YA together. With that out of the way. Romance and YA are two of the most popular but also the most stigmatised genre and readership that I know. And it just so happens that they are my two most favourite reading chooses. 

I started reading YA when I was 12 years old and at 23 it’s still one of my most read readerships. While it took me a while to start reading adult romances, most of the YA I read included a romance. I’ve been reading romance for nearly five years now. And over the last two maybe three years it’s become mainly what I read. And I don’t think it’s something that will ever change. I think I will be reading YA and romance for a very long time.

Photo by freestocks on Unsplash

Stigma and Young Adult Lit

While at high school I didn’t notice the stigma in regards to young adult novels. But as the years went on and I got older and continued to read and write YA, I noticed it more. And then I went to university – and that is when it hit me. 

If you don’t know I did a writing and editing degree straight out of high school. And let me tell you I loved it. I recommend my degree to anyone that I can because it was brilliant. However, it was through this degree that I was able to witness the stigma about YA first hand. I can’t tell you how many times I said I read YA/Write YA and class members would look down on me. At first, it was dishearting. It was all I had read up till that point. It’s what I lived and breathed. I read it, I wrote it and I blogged about it. And to have someone look at you like they are better than you was hard. But as the course went on and I got to talk about young adult more and what it is, things became a lot better. 

I don’t understand where the stigma comes from reading YA. But as I write this post I keep on thinking about it. I think it stems from the notion that teens ‘don’t know anything’ or that they only care about ‘being popular’ and the internet. But I find that I learn and understand things so much more when I read YA novels over adult books. They aren’t just these happy go lucky books that make the world seem like it’s dandy. But they are so much more than that. 

Young Adult novels are educational, political, inspirational while also teaching readers about human life and being fun and adventurous. They can take the reader on a journey that I don’t think you can get from anything else. Some of the books that have hit me the most have been young adult, and they are the ones that I always recommend to others. 

I’m also a bookseller and I cannot even begin to tell you the looks I get and the things that I hear in regards to reading YA. It has such a bad connotation that even people that don’t regularly read believe that it’s a waste of time and not for them. I sometimes even have parents come in looking for something for their child. And then I recommend them YA – and they ask for something ‘good.’ It feels like a neverending cycle sometimes. 

Photo by Toa Heftiba on Unsplash

Stigma and Romance Novels 

Even before I started reading romance novels, I knew the stigma that came along with it. That it was all about sex. That there is no substance. And for some time I believed them until I started to read romance. As I said I’ve been reading romance for the past five years or so and I have learnt a lot of things. 

There are so many sub genre’s in regards to romance and I think the general public and people that I call ‘gatekeepers’ of reading, only focus on certain ones. This comes down to certain novels and series becoming popular and mainstream. And those are the books that people focus on and attribute to all of the romance.

I don’t think I need to talk about this much, but 50 Shades of Grey has to be one of the most popular and mainstream romances in regards to the general population. It’s what people associate with romance and where their minds immediately go with you say you read romance. But that is only one part of romance. It’s one sub-genre and that is all. Don’t get me wrong there are sexy times in most romances, but they are not all like 50 Shades.

Another thing that has come to up over the past few weeks is the negative connotations in the way that relationships are presented. 365 Days has pushed this. I’ve been seeing a lot on social media about how the relationships were presented – and while it might be bad in the book and show it’s not how all the relationships are in romance.

Something else that I’ve seen highlighted over the last couple of weeks is the stigma in relation to MC and Mafia romances. Again I think this because of media and hype around movies like 365 Days. I’ve been reading a lot of MC romances over the last couple of months, and just because I enjoyed reading does not mean I like and support the things that happen in the novels in real life. It’s this barrier of reality and fiction. 

But romance is so much more than the stigmas that surround it. Like I said there are so many sub-genres of romance and that means there are so many ways that romance can go. I mostly read historical romance along with MC, College and Miltary romances. I do dapple a little in other genre’s, but that is what I mostly stick to. And it’s so much more than sex. They can explore things that are hard to read. From family and death to mental health and disability. They also just happen to have a romance at the centre of it all. 

Photo by Fabiola Peñalba on Unsplash

Overcoming these stigmas 

I think one of the most important things we as readers need to do in regards to stigmas and genre is to squash them. Readers are one of the main driving points of stigmas and mostly it’s from people that don’t read the genre or readership. You can not like a genre, you can not read. But please don’t hate on it or keep these stigmas going. It only flues the fire and creates more of a distance. 

We need to be able to move away from these stigmas because they are not only wrong, they stop a lot of people from reading the genre and readership. There could be many reasons why people don’t pick up certain genres or readership, please don’t give them another reason. 

***

What do you think of stigmas and genres? How do you think we can knock down the wall and have people reading whatever they want? Do you have any stigmas about certain genre’s? Let’s Chat! 

Like this:

Like Loading...

Related

1 Comment
Share

1 Comment

Leave your reply.
  • Marg
    · Reply

    June 30, 2020 at 6:55 PM

    As a long term romance reader I feel your pain! There is definitely that idea that some genres are fluff and therefore not as important as others.

    I think one of the interesting things is that all genre fiction feels like it is marginalised in this way. I know crime readers who feel this way, and fantasy and scifi the same.

    I wonder why that is!

    Loading...

Leave a Reply

Your email is safe with us.
Cancel Reply

Recent Posts

  • Books Covers With Typography That I Love | TTT
  • New To Me Authors I Loved in 2025
  • My Favourite Reads of 2025
  • Most Anticipated Books Releasing in the First Half of 2026
  • Slow but an Okay August | Monthly Wrap Up

Subscribe to Angel Reads

Enter your email address to subscribe to Angel Reads and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Bookstagram

angelreads

book blogger 💻| romance books 💜| bookseller 📖
💌 angel@angelreads.com
📚15/150

I have a love-hate relationship with this series. I have a love-hate relationship with this series. But I ended up really enjoying this one. It’s best friends to fake dating to-lovers. It’s always been you, bad-boy/good-girl, and I loved that. While Save Your Breath has quite a few tropes, it really leads itself to it, and it works. 

Aleks and Mia have known each other for years now. Since they were teenagers, that angst has been building up this whole time. And you can tell right from the get-go, it’s fantastic. I even wanted more of it, because I love pain. When Aleks went to live with Mia’s family as a teenager, sparks flew, but for many reasons, they both put their feelings aside. And well, now they are not only going to be fake-dating, but they might as well be engaged, too. 

I really enjoyed seeing how both Aleks and Mia both tried to hide how they were feeling throughout the whole ‘fake-dating’ situation, but anyone could see it. They know each other as no one else does. Aleks has a lot going on, and while I do think this was brushed over a little too much, Mia is his centre. Mia is a massive music star and is a female in the industry, so yeah, people don’t respect her. Obvsiouly because why couldn’t a female star be badass and write about the things that she has gone through? Aleks and Mia get each other, and that is very clear from the start; they are both just trying to squash everything. We get to see them slowly start to show how they feel, and well, one night it all explodes. 

Overall, I enjoyed this one a lot; it’s not my favourite of the series, but I had a great time reading it. I liked Aleks and Mia a lot as characeters and while I think the mental health aspect could have been explored a whole lot more, I can see why it wasn’t. The romance was slow and spicy, the angst was great, and the payoff for these two was what they needed. 

Tropes
🏒Sports/Hockey Romance
🎤Fake Dating/Engagement
🏒Childhood Friends to Lovers
🎤Forced Proximity
🏒Athlete x Pop Star 
🎤Angsty Slow Burn 

Content Warnings
Mental Health Struggles 
Suicide Intention 
Family Deaths 
Alcohol Consumption
Violence on Ice

🏷️ 
#romancebooks #bookstagram  #angelreads #spicybooks #bookreview
Well February wasn’t the best reading month. I onl Well February wasn’t the best reading month. I only ended up reading 3 books in. 3 pretty fun books but one of my slowest readings months in a while. 

And I’m going to be honest here it’s because I’ve been constantly reading Heated Rivalry fanfics. 🤷‍♀️ I’m having the best time though. 

How was your reading in February? Any 5  star reads? 

🏷️ 
#romancebooks #bookstagram  #angelreads #spicybooks #februarywrapup
January was a really solid reading month. I read s January was a really solid reading month. I read some books that had been on my tbr for some time, reread a few things that peaked my interest. I also started a few new series. And just had a good time!

I just had a really good start to the year. While February is a little slow so far I’m looking forward to what I can pick up.

What did you read in January? Any 5-star reads? Let’s chat! 

🏷️ 
#romancebooks #bookstagram  #angelreads #spicybooks #januarywrapup
Can you believe that it’s already February? I know Can you believe that it’s already February? I know I can’t. But that means it’s a new month with more releases coming out! And that makes me excited. Some fantastic titles releasing this month and I cannot wait to read them. 📚

A couple of these are on my TBR already and some have just caught my eye and that makes me super excited to pick them up. 🖤

What are you looking forward to reading this month? Let’s chat! ✨

🏷️ 
#romancebooks #bookstagram  #angelreads #spicybooks #Februaryreleases2026
Follow on Instagram

GoodReads

2026 Reading Challenge

2026 Reading Challenge
Angel - Angel Reads has read 0 books toward her goal of 150 books.
hide
0 of 150 (0%)
view books

Contact Us

Send us an email and I'll get back to you, asap.

Send Message

© 2013 - 2026 · Angel Reads · Disclaimer

Prev Next
%d